TORONTO -- Medicine Hat Tigers defenseman Tyler Lewington measures in at 6-foot-1 and 189 pounds, but no player was bigger when it came to some of the upper-body tests during the two days of fitness testing at the NHL Scouting Combine.

Lewington, No. 66 on NHL Central Scouting's final ranking of North American skaters, performed a Combine-best 16 repetitions on the 150-pound bench press, one more than forward Kerby Rychel of the Windsor Spitfires and Shawinigan Cataractes defenseman Dylan Labbe.

Lewington also did the most pushups, 42, finishing ahead of Rimouski Oceanic defenseman Jan Kostalek, who had 37. United States National Team Development Program center John Hayden and Portland Winterhawks center Nicolas Petan were next with 36.

In the push strength measurement, Lewington again finished first, at 341.0 pounds. Viktor Crus Rydberg, a center with Linkoping's team in the Swedish junior league, was next at 307.0 pounds.

Crus Rydberg was first in the pull strength measurement, at 344.0 pounds. Bogdan Yakimov, a center with Nizhnekamsk in Russia, was next at 311.0 pounds.

Rimouski defenseman Samuel Morin had the highest peak power output on the Wingate Ergometer bike test, measuring 15.8 watts per kilogram of body weight. Seattle Thunderbirds defenseman Shea Theodore was next at 15.8, followed by Portland Winterhawks forward Oliver Bjorkstrand at 14.9.

Adam Tambellini of the Surrey Eagles of the British Columbia Hockey League had the lowest body-fat percentage at 5.0. Jonathan Drouin of the Halifax Mooseheads, Central Scouting's third-ranked skater, was second at 5.4 percent. His teammate, No. 2-ranked skater Nathan MacKinnon, was seventh at 7.6 percent.

Central Scouting's top-rated skater, Seth Jones of the Portland Winterhawks, had the longest wingspan, at 81.0 inches. Victoriaville Tigres defenseman Jonathan-Ismael Diaby also measured in at 81.0 inches, followed by London Knights defenseman Nikita Zadorov at 80.5 inches.

Saginaw Spirit forward Nick Moutrey had the longest toss of the four-kilogram medicine ball, at 246 inches. USNTDP right wing Michael McCarron was second at 241 inches, and Bratislava center Marko Dano was third at 232.

Here are the top 10 finishers in selected categories from the two days of testing: